Payola

Introducing Payola

I released an open source Rails engine named Payola that you can drop into any application to have robust, reliable self-hosted Stripe payments up and running with just a little bit of fuss.

When you’re setting up Stripe in a Rails application there are a lot of choices you have to make. What should you use for webhooks? Do you even need webhooks? How much information should you keep in your database? Should you use Checkout or do you need to design your own form? Amongst all of these choices, you also have to decide what libraries you want to use, and boy howdy are there even more options here. Koudoku, StripeEvent, Stripe::Rails, not to mention commercial options like Gumroad, Plasso, and Cargo.

One of the reasons why I wrote my book Mastering Modern Payments: Using Stripe with Rails is to help you narrow down that set of choices to something reasonable, and I think it does a very good job of it. That said, even if you’re using my book you still have to actually write the code to implement Stripe. Not that it’s a lot of code, but it’s basically always the same.

For the recent relaunch of MMP I decided to actually sit down and formalize the “hows” laid out in the book into a Rails engine. Anyone can drop Payola into an application and have payments going without too much drama, and notably none of the choices outlined above.

What Payola Does

Payola provides a complete solution for accepting Stripe payments within a Rails application. It is focused on selling items one at a time and includes a drop-in partial for setting up a Stripe Checkout button, along with a complete server-side asynchronous processing system for completing payments with Stripe.

Payola has built-in support for Sidekiq and Sucker Punch, but it’s easy to add new backend worker systems which makes it even easier to adapt to your current system.

Payola should also be transparent to your customers. There should never be a time when they actually see a Payola URL in their address bar, nor should they ever see something Payola branded. From a buyer’s perspective it should be your site selling the product, not Payola.

Token is passed the Payola’s javascript, which in turn POSTs it to the backend.

Payola creates a Payola::Sale object with the token and sets it to pending state.

Payola queues a background job to create a Stripe charge for the corresponding sale and passes the sale’s guid attribute back to the JS.

The buyer’s browser disables the button and polls Payola every 500ms asking for the state of their charge.

The background job calls the Payola.charge_verifier callback, then creates the charge with Stripe, then sends the payola.<product>.sale.finished notification to your application.

The background job finally sets the sale’s state to finished, which is picked up by the JS.

The user’s browser redirects to /payola/confirm/<guid> and then is immediately redirected to whatever the product’s redirect_url returns, defaulting to /.

A charge will typically fail in the background job (step 8), either because the charge_verifier rejects it or Stripe rejects it. In that case, the sale is set to errored, the error message is set in the error column, and the Payola JS shows it in a (customizable) div after re-enabling the button. Your application will also receive a payola.<product>.sale.errored notification.

Installation

Installing Payola in your app is just a few steps. First, add the gem:

gem 'payola-payments'

Then, run the installer and install the migrations:

$ rails g payola:install
$ rake db:migrate

Next add the Payola::Sellable concern to the models you want to sell:

class SomeProduct < ActiveRecord::Base
include Payola::Sellable
end

Your model needs three attributes:

permalink: a unique, human readable name

name: a short description

price: the price for the sellable in whatever format Stripe expects. For USD this is cents, for other currencies it could be different.

By default Payola will use USD but you can change that by adding an optional currency method to your sellable model. This can either be a fixed method if you’re only using one currency, or it can be a column in the database if your products come in multiple currencies.

Optionally, you can provide a method named redirect_path. This method takes a Payola::Sale instance and returns a path where Payola should redirect the browser after a successful purchase. If you don’t provide this Payola will redirect to ’/’.

While the checkout partial has reasonable defaults for getting off the ground, you can customize basically every aspect of it. See the documentation for details.

Event Handling

Stripe has excellent support for webhook events and the StripeEvent gem does an excellent job handling them. Payola thinly wraps StripeEvent and adds a bit of behavior. To receive events, just set up a webhook url in your Stripe account settings that points at https://www.example.com/payola/events. Then, configure an event listener in config/initializers/payola.rb:

Payola.configure do |config|
config.subscribe 'charge.succeeded' do |event|
puts "whoohoo!"
end
end

Payola adds deduplification to StripeEvent. It records every event_id that comes in and will only ever process an event once. If you’d like to further filter events, you can set event_filter, which should either return a Stripe::Event or nil if you’d like to stop processing.

In addition to Stripe’s webhooks, you can listen for three special events:

payola.<underscored product class>.payment.finished

payola.<underscored product class>.payment.failed

payola.<underscored product class>.payment.refunded

These are invoked with the corresponding Payola::Sale, not a Stripe::Event and are executed in-line with the async processing chain, which means you can do things like create a user or send an email before the user-facing javascript returns.

What’s Next

Currently Payola does not handle subscriptions or marketplaces, so those will be next on the list. Along with those I’ll be adding support for custom forms instead of the Checkout button. I’m also planning on building out a Pro version that will include priority support and a bunch of pre-built integrations for external systems like Mailchimp, Mixpanel, Infusionsoft, and more.